Abstract: This folder contains one folder of correspondence and newspaper clippings from Ina Coolbrith to Lorenzo Sosso; one folder
of correspondence, newspaper clippings, and a photograph from Charles B. Turrill to Ina Coolbrith; and two letters from Ina
Coolbrith to Zoeth Eldridge.

This folder contains one folder of correspondence and newspaper clippings from Ina Coolbrith to Lorenzo Sosso; one folder
of correspondence, newspaper clippings, and a photograph from Charles B. Turrill to Ina Coolbrith; and two letters from Ina
Coolbrith to Zoeth Eldridge.

Biographical/Historical note

Born Josephine Anna Smith in Nauvoo, IL to Agnes Moulton Coolbrith and Don Carlos Smith, she was the neice of the Mormon prophet
Joseph Smith, Jr. After Don died Agnes married Joseph under the Levirate regulation. After he was killed by an anti-Mormon,
anti-polygamist mob in June 1844 she moved to St. Louis, MO and married William Pickett, a non-Mormon lawyer and printer.
They had twin sons and then moved to Los Angeles, CA in 1851. While riding the wagon train, Pickett read to Ina the works
of Shakespeare and poetry by Lord Byron, fostering her early love of poetry. She crossed into California on the horse of Jim
Beckwourth, a famous African-American scout. Once in LA, Agnes changed her family's name to avoid association with Mormonism
and Ina became "Josephine Donna Coolbrith".

She was briefly married at 17 to iron-worker and actor Robert Carsley. He was abusive, and after the death of their infant
son he and Pickett got into a heated argument. Carsley was shot in the hand and had to have it amputated. Ina divorced him
on 12/30/1861in a very public trial where he accused her of infidelity. She moved with her family up to San Francisco in 1852
and shortened her name to "Ina".

Within a few years she had become a famous poet. She formed the "Golden Gate Trinity" with Bret Harte and Charles Warren Stoddard,
and often held literary salons in her home. She served as the Oakland City Librarian for 19 years (where she mentored a young
Jack London and Isadora Duncan) before retiring to write and autobiography and history of California. Most of her work was
destroyed in the fires that consumed the city after the 1906 earthquake, but she soon recovered. On 06/30/1915 she became
the first California Poet Laureate and the first poet laureate of any state. The park at 1715 Taylor St., SF was named for
her in 1911, and in 1915 she was named President of the Congress of Authors and Journalists for the Panama–Pacific International
Exposition. She fell ill from arthritis in 1923. Ina is buried in Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland in Plot 11.